The ASU Big Bands come together for an evening of vintage selections spanning the history of big band music.

"The Pirates of Penzance" premiered on Dec. 31, 1879 at the Fifth Avenue Theater in New York with Arthur Sullivan conducting. It was an immediate hit and takes its place today as one of the most popular and enduring works of musical theatre. In "The Pirates of Penzance," Frederic was apprenticed as a child to a band of tenderhearted, orphaned pirates by his nurse who, being hard of hearing, had mistaken her employer’s instructions to apprentice the boy to a pilot.

Arizona State University welcomes British-Bangladeshi birder, environmentalist and activist Mya-Rose Craig as a guest in its TomorrowTalks series. Craig will discuss her memoir "Birdgirl" (2023) in an online event on Tuesday, Sep. 26, 2023 at 5 p.m. Arizona / MST (5 p.m. PDT / 6 p.m. MDT / 7 p.m. CDT / 8 p.m. EDT).

The event is free of charge and open to the public; please register to attend.

Once a month we host a volunteer event and open house for the ASU Community to come and learn more about our programs at Garden Commons. It is also an opportunity to roll up your sleeves and volunteer to help with our garden tasks from planting, weeding, harvesting, and watering. We provide all necessary tools and training. The garden is maintained by ASU students and all produce is distributed through our weekly Farm Stand or donated to a local food pantry.

If there are millions of Americans who are blind, deaf, or both, why do too many pretend that people with these disabilities don't exist or worst, are incapable of being functional members of society? This program, led by local Deaf, hard of hearing, and DeafBlind/CVHL community members goes beyond addressing gaps in accessibility to open attendees up to the rich and vibrant world of identity, language, and culture among people with disabilities.

Hours after the 2017 travel ban takes effect, a mosque in South Texas erupts in flames. Now, this quiet community must reckon with the deep rifts that drove a man to hate. Join us as we discuss Islamaphobia, xenophobia, and it's effects on the receiving communities.

Join us for an interactive program where we explore naming rituals, the importance of names and how we share our stories through the sharing of our names.

"Do you often feel that the media is rooted in fear mongering? Do you wonder if we can even talk about diversity without it sparking into something bigger? Can we listen honestly to one another about how we live, experience, understand, and what it means to exist in a diverse society? How do our fears frame the lens in which we look at various topics such as affirmative action or DEI programs?

You’re invited to join us for a unique event on August 24, 2023! Space Futures Live will bring to the stage seven visiting scholars across a broad disciplinary landscape united in their mission to shape an inclusive and sustainable future for humanity in space. Space is limited, register today!

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